The Rusiian born viuolist, Michael Zaretsky, graduated from the Moscow State Conservatory cum laude. He began his career as a member of the Moscow Philharmonic String Quartet and the Moscow Radio and TV Symphony Orchestra.
In 1972, Michael Zaretsky immigrated to Israel and became principal viola of the Jerusalem Broadcasting Symphony Orchestra and a soloist of Radio Israel. The following year he played for Leonard Bernstein, who brought him to Tanglewood, where he successfully auditioned for the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Besides being a member of the Boston Symphony Orchestra for the past thirty-three years, Zaretsky regularly plays solo recitals and chamber music; he has appeared with such leading artists as Yuri Bashmet, Yefim Bronfman, Emanuel Ax, and Vadim Repin. As a soloist, he has appeared with the Boston Pops Orchestra, Rhode Island Philharmonic, and Atlantic Symphony Orchestra.
A faculty member at Boston University and the Longy School of Music, Michael Zaretsky
regularly performs in Israel, Japan, and Mexico. In the summer of 2003 he was soloist with the Georgian Chamber Orchestra at the International Music Festival directed by Liana Issakadze in Borjomi, Georgia. In November 2005, at the invitation of the American College of Greece, he performed and discussed J.S. Bach’s six cello suites () in Athens, Greece. In January 2007 he performed Jakov Jakoulov’s Viola Concerto No. 2 with the New England String Ensemble.
Michael Zaretsky has made four acclaimed recordings for Artona: “Black Snow,” an album of Russian music for viola and piano with pianist Xak Bjerken; “Bach, Bach & Bach,” with harpsichordist Marina Minkin; “Singular Voices: Brahms, Schumann, and the Viola,” with Bjerken and mezzo-soprano Pamela Dellal; and an album of Bach’s six cello suites () performed on viola.
Besides the traditional viola repertoire, Michael Zaretsky performs an extensive repertoire of new music. His collaboration with composer Jakov Jakoulov has resulted in many works for viola with piano, harpsichord, or orchestra, including Jakoulov’s Viola Concerto No. 2, Sonata for Viola and Piano, Chant III for viola and cello, and Chant IV for viola and violin. In 2006, film composer and Boston Pops Orchestra Laureate Conductor John Williams wrote his Duo Concertante for Zaretsky and dedicated it him. Zaretsky and Boston Symphony Orchestra violinist Victor Romanul gave the public premiere of the Duo Concertante in Seiji Ozawa Hall at Tanglewood in August 2007. Zaretsky also performed Williams's Viola Concerto in summer 2010 with the Peninsula Music Festival Orchestra led by conductor Victor Yampolsky. |